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Si: - :,_» PAGE EIGHT THE EVENING LEADER, CORNING, N. Y„ MONDAY, DECEMBER 1. 1930. Northside Tigers Start Court Workouts For Opening Tilt Lack of Experienced Material Noticeable Blake, Hale, Lee and Weaver With Aid of Turevon of 1929- 30 Squad Will Form a Nucleus for Team About a month ago, backers of ! Northside High School athletic' teams, and the basketball team in particular, were forcasting another County and City Championship for j the Tigers, and theu the annual trek to Rochester for the sectional fight, but the complexion of the features has clouded somewhat since then, and now it looks like anybody's fight. At that time, it was thought that two veterans of last year's championship quintet would be back, but two minutes of play four years ago robbed the team of its stellar forward, George Trumbull, leaving only "Pick" Turevon, vet- eran center for three years, to carry on where his ol 1 teammates left off. Besides Trumbull, Jacoby will ! be without the valued services of "Hattie" Ketchum, all-county for- ward, and a veteran of four cam- paigns; "Chuck" Strong, and "Swede" Hanson, last year's reg- ular guards. Both these boys learned * lot about the game last year, and were at the top of the ladder when the season closed, and will be missed this year. All four boys, have banded together, how- ever, with Eddie Collins, former Academy all-county guard, and i Woodwortb, center with Mans- field State College to keep in trim for future duty. A couple of the group are college-inclined, and they canot afford to waste any .time between high school and col- lege- DUe to the fact that football has held yje attention rtt athletes, and coaches alike right up until the laat moment, neither will have much oportunlty to mold a team of lest year's calibre together be- fore the opening contest, which is scheduled for Friday of this week. It is a County league game, with Haverling High furnishing the op- position. Bath has be-en practicing for some time, and will have the advantage in this respect, while the locals have only the advantage of playing on the home court. Some of the boys worked out Saturday afternoon, but the first official call did not come until this afternoon after school. A large group reported, but there is little indication as to who will make up the team. Inter-class teams will have to furnish most of the materi- al this year, again indicating the importance of such competition. Besides the four veterans who are not available this year, the ab- sentee list includes such letter men and members of the Tony Five as "Chuck" Hungerford. guard; "Ricky" Philbriek. diminutive for- ward, who will hot be eligible until after the January exams; "Tom- my" Bavisotto, a guard. However, four other members of this group stand good chances to get into the picture as regulars this year. They are "Shine" Blake, hero of the recent Thanksgiving Day football classic: "Bill" Hale, elon- gated "Stretch" Murphy of the squad; Harold Lee, and Weaver. Of the four. Blake is sure of a guard position, and Hale should land one of the scoring positions, leaving Turevon at his old place at center. The latter two have out- side interests, and may not be able to play basketball this year, leav- ing places open for such inter-class stars as Richard Riffle, and Ken- neth Adriance, an exact duplicate on the basketball court of his brother, and "Art" Young, south- paw forward, who may get a chance at Ketehum's old place. Others may show up at practice, and it Is highly possible that Jaco- by will use several men against Haverling Friday in an endeavor to find a working group. Faculty manager, Maynard Guernsey reports that the sched- ule is not complete as yet, but he promises some real games this year, including Jersey Shore, Pa., the hosts of Tiger football teamfl for the past two years. The second game of the season is slated with Westficld. Pa., at Westfield, one week from tomorrow night, giv- ing the Tigers but five days of act- ual practice and a game between the second game. ^ALAN GOULD ^ ^fflfHRaP* Too have heard of the coach's dream, of an All-America team in action with everything clicking in a perfect exhibition of football. Well, boys, it came true twice on the same day. On opposite sides of the continent the afternoon of Saturday, No- vember 8, Howard Jones of Southern California, and Knute Kenneth Rockne of Notre Dane must have felt like rubbing their eyes, pinching themselves to make rare it was not just a dream, after all, instead of the real thing that was unfolded before them by their gridiron puptfs. It it doubtful if modern major league football anywhere has wit- nessed as faultless exhibitions of offensive football as Notre Dame manifested in slaughtering Pennsylvania, 60-20, or Southern Califor- nia displayed in overwheluing California 74-0. What ft battle it will be if the Fighting Irish and the Trojans ran reproduce such football when they meet in the Los Angeles Coli- seum December 6. What a battle, anyway. ID some fifteen years of peering intently at various gridiron pro- ceedings East, West and South. I have never seen such perfect co- ordination, such superlative blocking, such sustained offensive drive as Notre Dame put on exhibition for the benefit of 80,000 at Franklin Field. Dartmouth's passing attack in 1925 was devastating. Illinois with Grange packed a sensational, scoring punch. The "Four Horsemen" were ft great offensive combination, but this 1930 Notre Dame scoring factory produces touchdowns like Ford turns out motor cars. The Irish averaged a point-a-minute against Pennsylvania but 54 of their 60 points were scored in only 20 minutes of actual playing time, • Every time Notre Dame had the ball and catapulted the carrier through an opening, it was a potential touchdown. The Rockne regulars, after warming up, had nine chances to carry the ball over for a touchdown. They capitalized eight of these chances in marches of from 15 to 77 yards, advancing the pigskin by straight rushing • total of 534 yards in an aggregate of 29 plays. The result was nearly always the same, whether Savoldi, Brill, O'Connor, Schwartz or Mullins toted the ball. It was either a first down or a touchdown. Appropriately enough, all this activity was directed by the All- America quarterback, Frank Carideo of Mt. Vernon, New York. Old Penn has not had such gridiron humiliation heaped upon her m over 40 years. Back in the 80*s, before the advent of the Woodruff "steam-roller system" at Philadelphia, the Quakers were easy victims Of tile Old Big Three—Yard, Harvard and Princeton. In the canvas-jacketed days of 1887 Princeton walloped Penn three times in one season to the tune of 95-0, 61-0, 48-0. The Tigers repeated the triple dose next year and to make it unanimous Harvard and Yale each plastered the Quakers by 50-0. However, that was before Woodruff, Hare, Broobe, Osgood and other stalwarts made the Red and Blue a mighty gridiron factor. In modern times, the worst Penn defeats were the 34-3 lacing by Michigan in 1914, the 41-0 beating by Georgia Tech in 1917. the 41-0 slaughter by Kak of Cornell in 1921, the 28-2 reverse at the hands of Grange and Illinois in 192&. Louis Waller, the full-blooded Caddo Indian from Andarko, Okla- homa, weighs less than Albie Booth but he has built up a great repu- tation as a broken-field galloper for Haskell Institute of Kansas, The vital statistics show that the 135-pound Haskell field leader got off at least one long run in every game. His most spectacular af- ternoon was against Oklahoma Aggies when he returned a kickoff 90 yards for • touchdown and later ran 95 yards for a touchdown after receiving a punt. Last year Weller turned in the season's longest dash by romping 105 yards from kickoff for a touchdown against Creighton. Among his numerous accomplishments, Weller can pass with either hand but dispatches do not state whether he also gives the tribal war- whoop after each crossing of the enemy goal. SPEED AND DECEPTION TAKE ROLE IN CHOOSING ELEVENS The gridiron exploits of Jim Thorpe, all-around athletic mar- vel, with the Carlisle Indians, stamped him as perhaps the great- est football player of all time. No. 8—Heap Big Chief Many of the most brilliant all- time football stars sparkled in the span of 1909-12 as speed and de- ception began to take their right- ful places with beef and power in the development of winning teams. Batteringrani Ted Coy of Yale closed out his All-America career In 1909 in a blaze of glory as the Ells whipped Harvard, 8-0, and defeated Princeton, 17-0. Michigan's Benbrook, described by Walter Eekersall as "the great- est lineman whoever played in the middle west," was selected for first team All-America honors at guard in 1909-10 by Walter Camp. Hamilton Fish, Harvard's mighty tackle, and Johnny Kilpat- rlek, Yale end, were two-time All- Americas In seasons when the competition was keenest. In 1909 Lafayette's famous full- hack, George McCea, registered the longest run from scrimmage on record, taking the ball exact- ly on his own goal line and trav- eling 110 yards through the whole Swarthmore team for a touch- down. This can hardly be duplicated with the length of the field re- duced to 100 yards, a change made In 1912, along with the addition of a fourth down. Brown's All-America fjtiarter- liack, Earl Sprackling, led his 1910 team to sensational victories over the Carlisle Indians, 15-6, and Yale. 21-0. Throughout the gridiron world In 1911 rang the names I Sam White, Princeton's great end, and Carlisle's Jim Thorpe, capitaliz- ing after an interval the marvel-| ous ability that has stamped him in the opinion of many crtilcs as the greatest footba" player of them all. White beat Harvard and Yale by scooping up fumbled balls and racing for touchdowns that decid- ed the games. The Tiger star dashed 95 yards against Harvard and 60 against Yale In plays that still revive thrilling memories to those who saw them. List of Unbeaten And Untied Teams Notre Dame, Alabama Washington State are Leaden Under present-' rule lurk- ing fumble I balls dead at the point of recovery, neither of White's runs would have been pos- sible. Of Thorpe, whom he picked for his first All-America in 1911-12 at halfback, Camp wrote: "He is probably one of the most dangerous men in the back- lleld; a good runner on straight runs and wide runs; good at circl- ing the ends; a first class kicker and a kicker of placement goals. As well as being powerful on the attack, he can be rated at the highest on defense. Coached by the wily "Pop" Warner, the Indians were at the zenith of their colorful careers. Thorpe ripped the Harvard de- fenses to pieces as the Indians whipped Harvard, 18 to 15, in 1910. It was against Harvard that Warner pulled the famous "hid- den ball" trick for a touchdown. The pigskin was inserted under the back of the Indian carrier's jersey and he jogged over the Crimson goal line while the Har- f vard boys were searching wildly ' for the holder of the ball. On another occasion Warner had leather patches, resembling a football, sewed on the Indian jerseys. Percy Haughton, Har- vard coach, countered by inject- ing a red painted football Into the fray. Zepp Winner in National Race JERSEY CITY, N. J.. Dec. 1. —(>P)—Two new champions have been crowned in the national A. A. U. cross country running events. William Zepp of the Dor- chester Club, Dorchester, Mass., ran a fine race over the Bix-mile Lincoln Park course yesterday to take the individual title, held last year by Gus Moore of the Brook- lyn Harriers, but he could not re- tain the team title for his organi- zation and the Miilrose A. A. of New York took the championship. Zepp took an early field and beat out 66 rivals for the indi- vidual crown In 29 minutes, 43 seconds. He stood off a challenge by Joe McCluskey of Fordham University, competing unattach- ed, and won by about 20 yards. Moore, the defending champion, was hampered by an injured knee and finished 10th. The Miilrose Club had a low to- tal of 46 points by placing run- ners sixth, eighth, ninth, tenth and 13th in the team rankings. Three of the first 10 did not fig- ure in the team scoring. The Dorchester Club was second with 71 points. WICK'S PICK Last Saturday and yesterday marked the first two days in a long time that there hasn't been something doing on Pyrex Park field in the way of football, base- ball or what not. Sunday and came out with noth- ing but mud in the ears. It was for the Western New iTork Pro League football title, which nobody won. We figure that the local All-High ought to have a word or two for them la said league battle. They looked as good as any of the se-called big shots north of here. Notre Dame may be able to win from Southern Cal Saturday but It will be a hard one to crack. They have a few large bruises left over from the Array game and a long-tiresome train ride to stiffen them up the bargain. Local sports swings into basket- ball now and the three high schools are starting their various quintets off with either . . . "This will be the year for us," .. . or . . . I "No material, no chance for a team." CORNING PRESIDENTS EN- COUNTERS WITH ELMIRA Y.MCA. REDBIRDS The Presidents play the Y.M.C.A. team of Elmira Wednes- day at 8:30 on the Recreation Hall court. This is the second meeting of these two teams this season. The first game finished with the Redbirds on the long end 22-11. The locals' lineup will probably be Daily, If.; Mock, rf.; Shaddock, c.; Rahilly, lg.; McGovern, rg. The Redbirds were runner-ups in the State Meet last year. A large crowd is expected for the game. Pre-season dope is no good any- way. It never comes out as you expect It to. Grab off a little credit for Gim- mick. He said the Army-Notre Dame game would be close end decided in the last quarter or half. Metropolitan Cross Country jogs along without Hyland. He swept out of the north, grabbed the big title and went home again. Now the lads whom he trimmed are having races all of their own for one sort of a championship or another. If they get to arguing too much again, we'll send Hyland down to quiet them with a few long strides. About all the Rochester Oxfords do is play scoreless tie football games. They wrassled with the Buffalo Bears in a mud fight Such a Time as They Have With Boxing in Old Spain BARCELONA, Spain, Dec. 1.— la future world's champien in Car- (JP)—rt took an English referee, nera. Moss Deyong, to settle the boxing Although Paulino appeared war between Italy and Spain In j somewhat battered and was bleed which Primo Camera and Paulino Uzcudun were the armies. Deyong cast the deciding vote in favor of Camera yesterday when the judges disagreed after a 10-round bout and raised the excitement of the crowd of 90,000 to its high- est pitch. The two judges stuck to their opinions today. The Spanish Judge Casaaovas, said he believed Paul- ino should have been given the decision by a very slight margin. The Italian judge, Mazzla, gave his opinion not only that Camera had won but that he should be matched with young Stribling, Jack Sharkey and Max Schmeling as a foreomst contender for the world's heavyweight champion- ship. Referee Deyong said he saw ing freely at the end of the 10 rounds, he suffered no serious damage. Both fighters after the battle attended various entertain- ments. The Associated Press score sheet credited Paulino with win ning the fourth, fifth and sixth rounds and gave the third round as even. The other rounds were given to Camera. The Italian weighed 269 3-4 pounds, Paulino 206 3-4. A record crowd paid around 1,000,000 pesetas (about ,$110,- 000) to see the struggle. A few of the spectators tried to settle their disputes with fist fights after the bout was over, but a police detail of 1,000 had littlo trouble in keep- ing order. TO LEAD THE BLUE —By Pap Speaking of tackles, Alabama's pair, Freddy Sington and "Foots" Clement, so named because of his No. 14 hrogans, have been churning up a lot of Dixie gridiron shorn as the principal "breakers" m the Crimson Tide. Sington, by *ome critics, is regarded as the more aecompl shed lineman and a ranking All-America csndfdate, but both have done out- m a team that has swept loose everything it has faced NEW YORK, Dec, 1— (JP)One more team was eliminated from the nation's list of undefeat- ed and untied football teams last week, whan Oklahoma City fell before Tulsa in a battle of un- beaten elevens. Ten more remain, several with their seasons safely ended. Although Mount Morris of Ill- inois tops the list with the high- est storing total of the five teams which have won nine games apiece, Alabama and Notre Dame ere the real leaders with Washing- ton State running neck and neck Willi them. Utah, which added 41 points to its total last week, is the highest scoring unbeaten team. The In- dians have scored 340 points to 2ft for their opponents. Alabama still shows the best defensive rec- ord .only 13 points having/ been tallied against the Crimson Tide. The list of unbeaten and un- tied teams .as compiled by The Associated Pres*: College Won fill.) Mount Morris, Alabama Notre Dame .... Washington State Cardondale (III.) Utah St. Olaf, (Mian.) . Heidelberg. (Ohio) . Fresno State, (Gal) Tulsa, (Okla.) .... » * *•••*» * **.**• I * « * ; * i *•#*#*#* e * < For OaAsified Ada. Call 1000 Halalko and Mandell clash to- night. It is. the Auburn boys big chance to crash into the fistic limelight. Mandell is favored but Steve might get to blm. The bout is for eight rounds, lightweights, of course. Macaluso Holds Big Scoring Lead Adds More in Thursday's Game to Clinch National Honors ~. HE'S OA * E VAfcSfC T ' CITY LEAGUE The Indians took two out of three games from the Bankers on the Odd Fellows' alleys Friday evening. Cavanaugh roMed high total with 555 and Crowley.high single with 236. The Mallets took two out of three games from the Puritans on the Congregational alleys Friday evening. Pollock rolled high total of 568. Olson and Pollock rolled high singles with 202. The Ingersoll-Rand Five took two out of three games from the Odd Fellows on their own alleys Friday evening. Brace rolled high total of 525 and the Brace of the Ingersoll-Rand Five rolled high Single of 210. The Stantons scored a slam over the Lions on the Methodist alleys Friday evening, taking all three games. Southard rolled high total of 616 and high single of 212. The scores: Bankers Cassidy .... 14S 167 Conable 141 123 Pearce 130 181 Youngstrom 200 155 ... 169 163 By The Associated Pre.s* Adding nine points to his to'ai last week, Leonard Macaluso of Colgate easily held his lead in th« struggle for national football seor ing honors. Thursday's nine points, brought his mark up to 144 Moh ler of Southern California, holder of second place, also improved his position, scoring two touchdown. to bring his total to 108 polnu Christenson of Utah, scoring i« points, passed Spicer of Kentucky and took third place with 7>< points. The leader In each of the coun. try's nine major groups or confer ences, follows: Player and College Total East—Macaluso, Colgate i 44 Pacific—Mohler, So. Cal 'ins Rocky Mt.—Christensen, Utah 's Southern—-Spicer, Kentucky 75 Missouri Val—VonKoten Drake 73 Midwest—O'Neil, Detroit Southwest—Leland, Tex Christ Big Ten—Russell, Northwestern Big Six—Bausch, Kansas . Clute 156 12S 154 139 181 4C7 392 465 494 513 785 789 757 2331 Corning Indians Crowley .... 169 236 141 546 B. Walters . . 174 159 181 554 Cavanaugh .. 184 192 179 555 Campbell 116 165 170 451 Clark 141 143 121 405 Olson . . Pierce •-. Walker . Lockwood Barker? C. 784 895 Puritans . . '202 177 .•-,. 144 150 . . 148 172 .. 155 151 w 1-67 162 792 2501 140 178 150 119 163 519 472 470 425 492 fi<5 60 4S I— Forest, Field and Stream ! Greenfield . Duffey D. Fitzgerald Hauff ...... Pollock 81« 812 750 2378 Mallets 145 170 168 .483 201 165 180 546 199 152 130 481 190 122 159 471 167 202 199 568 Lowell Candeloupe Wade , Brace 902 811 836 2549 Ingersoll-Rand Five 185 128 .. 172 . . 210 695 I. O. O. 129 189 161 149 147 186 144 118 134 503 438 505 144 462 555 802 2052 F. Thomas . Brace ... Shaddock Pratt ... Bostwick Poland .. Schlelf .. Bong ... Webster . Southard . Overhlser Rice .... Crozler . ... 138 ... 175 ... 15S 637 Lions ... 147 ... 169 ... 129 ... 142 ... 146 733 191 191 157 201 740 168 109 154 167 189 788 Stantons ... 190 ,... 212 .. 173 ... 17* Iff 191 211 168 174 142 151 159 146 144 155 755 185 134 167 131 156 773 169 193 177 200 178 480 525 469 144 514 2132 500 412 450 440 491 2293 550 616 350 553 526 142 93* Sis 917 2737 Hyland's Follower Wins First Place Edward Weille, who was fav- ored with Hyland to win the Na- tional Interstholastlc Cross Coun- try crown, and who placed second behind him in the Branch Brook Park race Thanksgiving Day, won the Public Schools Athletic League chatnpionFuip of New York City Saturday over a less than S and 1-2 mile course on Van Cortlandt Park. ft is the second time be has won the title and the Lieutenant Johnny Overton Trophy, He wore the colors of Newtown High School. Hyland defeated him by a comfortable margin In the na- tional race. Ralph Ince Sued Following Crash LOS ANGELES, Dec. 1.—Ralph Ince, motion picture director and actor, was sued by W, M. Patch for 135,000 damage* yesterday. Patch alleged he was seriously In- jured October 25 In attempting to prevent Ince from assaulting an nnnamed third party With a pistol in a cafe In Beverly Hills. Patch said he tried to grab a pistol from luce, but the director **mr* him oa the head with IU By the death of Cha Gale, the northern Adirondacks lost one of the few figures linking pioneer days to the present. At 77. he was one of the most fam- ous of all mou tain guides. Gale's family went to the Adi- rondacks from Vermont in 1S6S, entering by the way of Potsdam and the Racquette River trail. Forty miles from Potsdam, in what is now the town of Child- wold, they cleared the virgin for- est and established a ho 3 near the shores of Catamount Pond, This location has since been nam- ed for them. The hotel they er- ected there is known as the Pond View House. Charles Gtale became famous for his skill in mounting game and fish as for his capabilities as a guide and woodsmen. He wit- nessed many changes. In his youth oxen did much of the haul- ing. He lived to see his hostelry linked to others by one of the best concrete highways in ths state. Stricken while accompanying < party of deer hunfers from his hotel, Gale was carried out of the woods on a crude litter and died in a Tapper Lake hospital. HI* grave is in the family cemetery and bis mound rises from land hs helped his father clear. Two Orange county hunters paid fines of $100 each at Port Jervis for what game wardens said constituted four distinct vio- lations of the conservation law. They shot a doe, from an auto* mobile parked on a public high- way, they shot it at night, and they had not been licensed to hunt. An eight-point back was among four seen in the vicinity of New- ark during the last few days. John Schmuck of Zurich said the buck was so close to his home he was able to count the points. Others were seen in wooded sec- tions near Marion and Lyons. Sportsmen believe the deer were driven from the mountains dur- ing brush fires. Reports that the wolf has re- appeared in the north country has been heard In that territory. One of the Incidents giving rise to the report was the catpure of and animal in a fox trap near Chasm Falls. The pelt was sold to a vett.an Adiron- dack fur buyer, who said it was that of a wolf. State Game Inspector Ray L. Burmaater then began an investigation to determ- ine whether the buyer's judgment was correct. For many years Adirondack counties paid bounties on wolves, so that they were hunted and trapped until they became practic- ally extinct in that territory. Sev- eral years ago, however, an ani* raal many persons seemed certain was a wolf was killed near Wil- mington. In Mrs. C. H. Tolbert, Saranse Lake boasts the champion women deer killer of the Adirondacks. She began deer hunting seven years ago and had never failed to get her bnek. This year she shot one just back of her camp on Fol- lonsbye Pond, Just a few more hikes and FJi - wort Fenton and his son, Raymond of Watklns Glen can attend foot- ball games in style. Father and son saw eight raccoons on a singi» tree limb, they went back for the guns and bagged all of them. Our citizenship will be revealed says the state college of forestry, In the management of our forests and other natural resources. "Reparations mnst be msde for the tremendous waste of natural resources wrought in this coun- try," the college says. "Until re- cently the public has been the chief loser, but those who control the exploitation of oar nature resources are' beginning to feci the effects of depletion, too. I' 1 the movement tor conservation, the rehabilitation of the forest the prevention of erosion, together with the regulation of water tw ply through proper forest ••* agement. stand out as son* of our most Important duties." sbk. i A Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Si: - :,_»

PAGE EIGHT THE EVENING LEADER, CORNING, N. Y„ MONDAY, DECEMBER 1. 1930.

Northside Tigers Start Court Workouts For Opening Tilt Lack of Exper ienced

Material N o t i c e a b l e Blake, Hale, Lee and

Weaver With Aid of Turevon of 1929-30 Squad Will Form a Nucleus for Team

About a month ago, backers of !

Northside High School athletic' teams, and the basketball team in particular, were forcasting another County and City Championship for j the Tigers, and theu the annual trek to Rochester for the sectional fight, but the complexion of the features has clouded somewhat since then, and now it looks like anybody's fight.

At that time, it was thought that two veterans of last year's championship quintet would be back, but two minutes of play four years ago robbed the team of its stellar forward, George Trumbull, leaving only "Pick" Turevon, vet­eran center for three years, to carry on where his ol 1 teammates left off.

Besides Trumbull, Jacoby will ! be without the valued services of "Hattie" Ketchum, all-county for­ward, and a veteran of four cam­paigns; "Chuck" Strong, and "Swede" Hanson, last year's reg­ular guards. Both these boys learned * lot about the game last year, and were at the top of the ladder when the season closed, and will be missed this year. All four boys, have banded together, how­ever, with Eddie Collins, former Academy all-county guard, and i Woodwortb, center with Mans­field State College to keep in trim for future duty. A couple of the group are college-inclined, and they canot afford to waste any

.time between high school and col­lege-

DUe to the fact that football has held yje attention rtt athletes, and coaches alike right up until the laat moment, neither will have much oportunlty to mold a team of lest year's calibre together be­fore the opening contest, which is scheduled for Friday of this week. It is a County league game, with

Haverling High furnishing the op­position. Bath has be-en practicing for some time, and will have the advantage in this respect, while the locals have only the advantage of playing on the home court.

Some of the boys worked out Saturday afternoon, but the first official call did not come until this afternoon after school. A large group reported, but there is little indication as to who will make up the team. Inter-class teams will have to furnish most of the materi­al this year, again indicating the importance of such competition.

Besides the four veterans who are not available this year, the ab­sentee list includes such letter men and members of the Tony Five as "Chuck" Hungerford. guard; "Ricky" Philbriek. diminutive for­ward, who will hot be eligible until after the January exams; "Tom­my" Bavisotto, a guard.

However, four other members of this group stand good chances to get into the picture as regulars this year. They are "Shine" Blake, hero of the recent Thanksgiving Day football classic: "Bill" Hale, elon­gated "Stretch" Murphy of the squad; Harold Lee, and Weaver. Of the four. Blake is sure of a guard position, and Hale should land one of the scoring positions, leaving Turevon at his old place at center. The latter two have out­side interests, and may not be able to play basketball this year, leav­ing places open for such inter-class stars as Richard Riffle, and Ken­neth Adriance, an exact duplicate on the basketball court of his brother, and "Art" Young, south­paw forward, who may get a chance at Ketehum's old place. Others may show up at practice, and it Is highly possible that Jaco­by will use several men against Haverling Friday in an endeavor to find a working group.

Faculty manager, Maynard Guernsey reports that the sched­ule is not complete as yet, but he promises some real games this year, including Jersey Shore, Pa., the hosts of Tiger football teamfl for the past two years. The second game of the season is slated with Westficld. Pa., at Westfield, one week from tomorrow night, giv­ing the Tigers but five days of act­ual practice and a game between the second game.

^ A L A N GOULD ^ ^fflfHRaP* Too have heard of the coach's dream, of an All-America team in

action with everything clicking in a perfect exhibition of football. Well, boys, it came true twice on the same day.

On opposite sides of the continent the afternoon of Saturday, No­vember 8, Howard Jones of Southern California, and Knute Kenneth Rockne of Notre Dane must have felt like rubbing their eyes, pinching themselves to make rare it was not just a dream, after all, instead of the real thing that was unfolded before them by their gridiron puptfs.

It it doubtful if modern major league football anywhere has wit-nessed as faultless exhibitions of offensive football as Notre Dame manifested in slaughtering Pennsylvania, 60-20, or Southern Califor­nia displayed in overwheluing California 74-0.

What ft battle it will be if the Fighting Irish and the Trojans ran reproduce such football when they meet in the Los Angeles Coli­seum December 6. What a battle, anyway.

ID some fifteen years of peering intently at various gridiron pro­ceedings East, West and South. I have never seen such perfect co­ordination, such superlative blocking, such sustained offensive drive as Notre Dame put on exhibition for the benefit of 80,000 at Franklin Field.

Dartmouth's passing attack in 1925 was devastating. Illinois with Grange packed a sensational, scoring punch. The "Four Horsemen" were ft great offensive combination, but this 1930 Notre Dame scoring factory produces touchdowns like Ford turns out motor cars.

The Irish averaged a point-a-minute against Pennsylvania but 54 of their 60 points were scored in only 20 minutes of actual playing time,

• Every time Notre Dame had the ball and catapulted the carrier through an opening, it was a potential touchdown.

The Rockne regulars, after warming up, had nine chances to carry the ball over for a touchdown. They capitalized eight of these chances in marches of from 15 to 77 yards, advancing the pigskin by straight rushing • total of 534 yards in an aggregate of 29 plays. The result was nearly always the same, whether Savoldi, Brill, O'Connor, Schwartz or Mullins toted the ball. It was either a first down or a touchdown.

Appropriately enough, all this activity was directed by the All-America quarterback, Frank Carideo of Mt. Vernon, New York.

Old Penn has not had such gridiron humiliation heaped upon her m over 40 years. Back in the 80*s, before the advent of the Woodruff "steam-roller system" at Philadelphia, the Quakers were easy victims Of tile Old Big Three—Yard, Harvard and Princeton.

In the canvas-jacketed days of 1887 Princeton walloped Penn three times in one season to the tune of 95-0, 61-0, 48-0. The Tigers repeated the triple dose next year and to make it unanimous Harvard and Yale each plastered the Quakers by 50-0.

However, that was before Woodruff, Hare, Broobe, Osgood and other stalwarts made the Red and Blue a mighty gridiron factor. In modern times, the worst Penn defeats were the 34-3 lacing by Michigan in 1914, the 41-0 beating by Georgia Tech in 1917. the 41-0 slaughter by Kak of Cornell in 1921, the 28-2 reverse at the hands of Grange and Illinois in 192&.

Louis Waller, the full-blooded Caddo Indian from Andarko, Okla­homa, weighs less than Albie Booth but he has built up a great repu­tation as a broken-field galloper for Haskell Institute of Kansas,

The vital statistics show that the 135-pound Haskell field leader got off at least one long run in every game. His most spectacular af­ternoon was against Oklahoma Aggies when he returned a kickoff 90 yards for • touchdown and later ran 95 yards for a touchdown after receiving a punt. Last year Weller turned in the season's longest dash by romping 105 yards from kickoff for a touchdown against Creighton.

Among his numerous accomplishments, Weller can pass with either hand but dispatches do not state whether he also gives the tribal war-whoop after each crossing of the enemy goal.

SPEED AND DECEPTION TAKE ROLE IN CHOOSING ELEVENS

The gridiron exploits of Jim Thorpe, all-around athletic mar­vel, with the Carlisle Indians, stamped him as perhaps the great­est football player of all time.

No. 8—Heap Big Chief Many of the most brilliant all-

time football stars sparkled in the span of 1909-12 as speed and de­ception began to take their right­ful places with beef and power in the development of winning teams.

Batteringrani Ted Coy of Yale closed out his All-America career In 1909 in a blaze of glory as the Ells whipped Harvard, 8-0, and defeated Princeton, 17-0.

Michigan's Benbrook, described by Walter Eekersall as "the great­est lineman whoever played in the middle west," was selected for first team All-America honors at guard in 1909-10 by Walter Camp.

Hamilton Fish, Harvard's mighty tackle, and Johnny Kilpat-rlek, Yale end, were two-time All-Americas In seasons when the competition was keenest.

In 1909 Lafayette's famous full-hack, George McCea, registered the longest run from scrimmage on record, taking the ball exact­ly on his own goal line and trav­eling 110 yards through the whole Swarthmore team for a touch­down.

This can hardly be duplicated with the length of the field re­duced to 100 yards, a change made In 1912, along with the addition of a fourth down.

Brown's All-America fjtiarter-liack, Earl Sprackling, led his 1910 team to sensational victories over the Carlisle Indians, 15-6, and Yale. 21-0.

Throughout the gridiron world In 1911 rang the names I Sam White, Princeton's great end, and Carlisle's Jim Thorpe, capitaliz­ing after an interval the marvel-| ous ability that has stamped him in the opinion of many crtilcs as the greatest footba" player of them all.

White beat Harvard and Yale by scooping up fumbled balls and racing for touchdowns that decid­ed the games. The Tiger star dashed 95 yards against Harvard and 60 against Yale In plays that still revive thrilling memories to those who saw them.

List of Unbeaten And Untied Teams

Notre Dame, Alabama Washington State are

Leaden

Under present-' rule lurk­ing fumble I balls dead at the point of recovery, neither of White's runs would have been pos­sible.

Of Thorpe, whom he picked for his first All-America in 1911-12 at halfback, Camp wrote:

"He is probably one of the most dangerous men in the back-lleld; a good runner on straight runs and wide runs; good at circl­ing the ends; a first class kicker and a kicker of placement goals. As well as being powerful on the attack, he can be rated at the highest on defense.

Coached by the wily "Pop" Warner, the Indians were at the zenith of their colorful careers. Thorpe ripped the Harvard de­fenses to pieces as the Indians whipped Harvard, 18 to 15, in 1910.

It was against Harvard that Warner pulled the famous "hid­den ball" trick for a touchdown. The pigskin was inserted under the back of the Indian carrier's jersey and he jogged over the Crimson goal line while the Har-

f vard boys were searching wildly ' for the holder of the ball.

On another occasion Warner had leather patches, resembling a football, sewed on the Indian jerseys. Percy Haughton, Har­vard coach, countered by inject­ing a red painted football Into the fray.

Zepp Winner in National Race

JERSEY CITY, N. J.. Dec. 1. —(>P)—Two new champions have been crowned in the national A. A. U. cross country running events. William Zepp of the Dor­chester Club, Dorchester, Mass., ran a fine race over the Bix-mile Lincoln Park course yesterday to take the individual title, held last year by Gus Moore of the Brook­lyn Harriers, but he could not re­tain the team title for his organi­zation and the Miilrose A. A. of New York took the championship.

Zepp took an early field and beat out 66 rivals for the indi­vidual crown In 29 minutes, 43 seconds. He stood off a challenge by Joe McCluskey of Fordham University, competing unattach­ed, and won by about 20 yards. Moore, the defending champion, was hampered by an injured knee and finished 10th.

The Miilrose Club had a low to­tal of 46 points by placing run­ners sixth, eighth, ninth, tenth and 13th in the team rankings. Three of the first 10 did not fig­ure in the team scoring. The Dorchester Club was second with 71 points.

WICK'S PICK

Last Saturday and yesterday marked the first two days in a long time that there hasn't been something doing on Pyrex Park field in the way of football, base­ball or what not.

Sunday and came out with noth­ing but mud in the ears.

It was for the Western New iTork Pro League football title, which nobody won. We figure that the local All-High ought to have a word or two for them la said league battle. They looked as good as any of the se-called big shots north of here.

Notre Dame may be able to win from Southern Cal Saturday but It will be a hard one to crack. They have a few large bruises left over from the Array game and a long-tiresome train ride to stiffen them up the bargain.

Local sports swings into basket­ball now and the three high schools are starting their various quintets off with either . . . "This will be the year for us," . . . or . . .

I "No material, no chance for a team."

CORNING PRESIDENTS EN­COUNTERS WITH ELMIRA

Y.MCA. REDBIRDS

The Presidents play the Y.M.C.A. team of Elmira Wednes­day at 8:30 on the Recreation Hall court. This is the second meeting of these two teams this season. The first game finished with the Redbirds on the long end 22-11.

The locals' lineup will probably be Daily, If.; Mock, rf.; Shaddock, c.; Rahilly, lg.; McGovern, rg.

The Redbirds were runner-ups in the State Meet last year. A large crowd is expected for the game.

Pre-season dope is no good any­way. It never comes out as you expect It to.

Grab off a little credit for Gim­mick. He said the Army-Notre Dame game would be close end decided in the last quarter or half.

Metropolitan Cross Country jogs along without Hyland. He swept out of the north, grabbed the big title and went home again. Now the lads whom he trimmed are having races all of their own for one sort of a championship or another.

If they get to arguing too much again, we'll send Hyland down to quiet them with a few long strides.

About all the Rochester Oxfords do is play scoreless tie football games. They wrassled with the Buffalo Bears in a mud fight

Such a Time as They Have With Boxing in Old Spain

BARCELONA, Spain, Dec. 1.— la future world's champien in Car-(JP)—rt took an English referee, nera. Moss Deyong, to settle the boxing Although Paulino appeared war between Italy and Spain In j somewhat battered and was bleed which Primo Camera and Paulino Uzcudun were the armies. Deyong cast the deciding vote in favor of Camera yesterday when the judges disagreed after a 10-round bout and raised the excitement of the crowd of 90,000 to its high­est pitch.

The two judges stuck to their opinions today. The Spanish Judge Casaaovas, said he believed Paul­ino should have been given the decision by a very slight margin. The Italian judge, Mazzla, gave his opinion not only that Camera had won but that he should be matched with young Stribling, Jack Sharkey and Max Schmeling as a foreomst contender for the world's heavyweight champion­ship. Referee Deyong said he saw

ing freely at the end of the 10 rounds, he suffered no serious damage. Both fighters after the battle attended various entertain­ments.

The Associated Press score sheet credited Paulino with win ning the fourth, fifth and sixth rounds and gave the third round as even. The other rounds were given to Camera. The Italian weighed 269 3-4 pounds, Paulino 206 3-4.

A record crowd paid around 1,000,000 pesetas (about ,$110,-000) to see the struggle. A few of the spectators tried to settle their disputes with fist fights after the bout was over, but a police detail of 1,000 had littlo trouble in keep­ing order.

TO LEAD THE BLUE —By Pap

Speaking of tackles, Alabama's pair, Freddy Sington and "Foots" Clement, so named because of his No. 14 hrogans, have been churning up a lot of Dixie gridiron shorn as the principal "breakers" m the Crimson Tide.

Sington, by *ome critics, is regarded as the more aecompl shed lineman and a ranking All-America csndfdate, but both have done out-

m a team that has swept loose everything it has faced

NEW YORK, Dec, 1— (JP)— One more team was eliminated from the nation's list of undefeat­ed and untied football teams last week, whan Oklahoma City fell before Tulsa in a battle of un­beaten elevens. Ten more remain, several with their seasons safely ended.

Although Mount Morris of Ill­inois tops the list with the high­est storing total of the five teams which have won nine games apiece, Alabama and Notre Dame ere the real leaders with Washing­ton State running neck and neck Willi t h e m .

Utah, which added 41 points to its total last week, is the highest scoring unbeaten team. The In­dians have scored 340 points to 2ft for their opponents. Alabama still shows the best defensive rec­ord .only 13 points having/ been tallied against the Crimson Tide.

The list of unbeaten and un­tied teams .as compiled by The Associated Pres*:

College Won fill.) Mount Morris,

Alabama Notre Dame . . . . Washington State Cardondale (III.) Utah St. Olaf, (Mian.) . Heidelberg. (Ohio) . Fresno State, (Gal) Tulsa, (Okla.) . . . .

» * * • • • * » * * * . * * • I

* « * ; * • i

* • # * # * # * e

* • • • • <

For OaAsified Ada. Call 1000

Halalko and Mandell clash to­night. It is. the Auburn boys big chance to crash into the fistic limelight. Mandell is favored but Steve might get to blm. The bout is for eight rounds, lightweights, of course.

Macaluso Holds Big Scoring Lead

Adds More in Thursday's Game to Clinch National

Honors

~. HE'S OA * E VAfcSfCT'

CITY LEAGUE The Indians took two out of

three games from the Bankers on the Odd Fellows' alleys Friday evening. Cavanaugh roMed high total with 555 and Crowley.high single with 236.

The Mallets took two out of three games from the Puritans on the Congregational alleys Friday evening. Pollock rolled high total of 568. Olson and Pollock rolled high singles with 202.

The Ingersoll-Rand Five took two out of three games from the Odd Fellows on their own alleys Friday evening. Brace rolled high total of 525 and the Brace of the Ingersoll-Rand Five rolled high Single of 210.

The Stantons scored a slam over the Lions on the Methodist alleys Friday evening, taking all three games. Southard rolled high total of 616 and high single of 212.

The scores: Bankers

Cassidy . . . . 14S 167 Conable 141 123 Pearce 130 181 Youngstrom 200 155

. . . 169 163

By The Associated Pre.s* Adding nine points to his to'ai

last week, Leonard Macaluso of Colgate easily held his lead in th« struggle for national football seor ing honors. Thursday's nine points, brought his mark up to 144 Moh ler of Southern California, holder of second place, also improved his position, scoring two touchdown. to bring his total to 108 polnu Christenson of Utah, scoring i« points, passed Spicer of Kentucky and took third place with 7>< points. •

The leader In each of the coun. try's nine major groups or confer ences, follows: Player and College Total East—Macaluso, Colgate i 4 4 Pacific—Mohler, So. Cal ' i n s Rocky Mt.—Christensen, Utah ' s Southern—-Spicer, Kentucky 75 Missouri Val—VonKoten Drake 73 Midwest—O'Neil, Detroit Southwest—Leland, Tex

Christ Big Ten—Russell,

Northwestern Big Six—Bausch, Kansas .

Clute

156 12S 154 139 181

4C7 392 465 494 513

785 789 757 2331 Corning Indians

Crowley . . . . 169 236 141 546 B. Walters . . 174 159 181 554 Cavanaugh . . 184 192 179 555 Campbell 116 165 170 451 Clark 141 143 121 405

Olson . . Pierce •-. Walker . Lockwood Barker? C.

784 895 Puritans . . '202 177 .•-,. 144 150 . . 148 172 . . 155 151 • w 1-67 162

792 2501

140 178 150 119 163

519 472 470 425 492

fi<5

60

4S

I —

Forest, Field and Stream !

Greenfield . Duffey D. Fitzgerald Hauff . . . . . . Pollock

81« 812 750 2378 Mallets

145 170 168 .483 201 165 180 546 199 152 130 481 190 122 159 471 167 202 199 568

Lowell Candeloupe Wade ,

Brace

902 811 836 2549 Ingersoll-Rand Five

185 128

.. 172

. . 210

695 I. O. O.

129 189 161 149 147 186

144 118 134

503 438 505 144 462

555 802 2052 F.

Thomas . Brace ...

Shaddock

Pratt ... Bostwick Poland .. Schlelf .. Bong ...

Webster . Southard . Overhlser

Rice .... Crozler .

... 138

... 175

• • ... 15S

637 Lions

... 147

... 169

... 129

... 142

... 146

733

191 191 157

201

740

168 109 154 167 189

788 Stantons

... 190 ,... 212 .. 173

... 17* I f f

191 211

168 174 142

151 159 146 144 155

755

185 134 167 131 156

773

169 193 177 200 178

480 525 469 144 514

2132

500 412 450 440 491

2293

550 616 350 553 526 142

93* Sis 917 2737

Hyland's Follower Wins First Place

Edward Weille, who was fav­ored with Hyland to win the Na­tional Interstholastlc Cross Coun­try crown, and who placed second behind him in the Branch Brook Park race Thanksgiving Day, won the Public Schools Athletic League chatnpionFuip of New York City Saturday over a less than S and 1-2 mile course on Van Cortlandt Park.

ft is the second time be has won the title and the Lieutenant Johnny Overton Trophy, He wore the colors of Newtown High School. Hyland defeated him by a comfortable margin In the na­tional race.

Ralph Ince Sued Following Crash

LOS ANGELES, Dec. 1.—Ralph Ince, motion picture director and actor, was sued by W, M. Patch for 135,000 damage* yesterday. Patch alleged he was seriously In­jured October 25 In attempting to prevent Ince from assaulting an nnnamed third party With a pistol in a cafe In Beverly Hills. Patch said he tried to grab a pistol from luce, but the director **mr* him oa the head with IU

By the death of Cha Gale, the northern Adirondacks lost one of the few figures linking pioneer days to the present. At 77. he was one of the most fam­ous of all mou tain guides.

Gale's family went to the Adi­rondacks from Vermont in 1S6S, entering by the way of Potsdam and the Racquette River trail. Forty miles from Potsdam, in what is now the town of Child-wold, they cleared the virgin for­est and established a ho 3 near the shores of Catamount Pond, This location has since been nam­ed for them. The hotel they er­ected there is known as the Pond View House.

Charles Gtale became famous for his skill in mounting game and fish as for his capabilities as a guide and woodsmen. He wit­nessed many changes. In his youth oxen did much of the haul­ing. He lived to see his hostelry linked to others by one of the best concrete highways in ths state.

Stricken while accompanying < party of deer hunfers from his hotel, Gale was carried out of the woods on a crude litter and died in a Tapper Lake hospital. HI* grave is in the family cemetery and bis mound rises from land hs helped his father clear.

Two Orange county hunters paid fines of $100 each at Port Jervis for what game wardens said constituted four distinct vio­lations of the conservation law. They shot a doe, from an auto* mobile parked on a public high­way, they shot it at night, and they had not been licensed to hunt.

An eight-point back was among four seen in the vicinity of New­ark during the last few days. John Schmuck of Zurich said the buck was so close to his home he was able to count the points. Others were seen in wooded sec­tions near Marion and Lyons. Sportsmen believe the deer were driven from the mountains dur­ing brush fires.

Reports that the wolf has re­appeared in the north country has been heard In that territory. One of the Incidents giving rise to the report was the catpure of and animal in a fox trap near Chasm Falls. The pelt was sold to a vett.an Adiron­dack fur buyer, who said it was that of a wolf. State Game Inspector Ray L. Burmaater then began an investigation to determ­ine whether the buyer's judgment was correct.

For many years Adirondack counties paid bounties on wolves, so that they were hunted and trapped until they became practic­ally extinct in that territory. Sev­eral years ago, however, an ani* raal many persons seemed certain was a wolf was killed near Wil­mington.

In Mrs. C. H. Tolbert, Saranse Lake boasts the champion women deer killer of the Adirondacks. She began deer hunting seven years ago and had never failed to get her bnek. This year she shot one just back of her camp on Fol-lonsbye Pond,

Just a few more hikes and FJi -wort Fenton and his son, Raymond of Watklns Glen can attend foot­ball games in style. Father and son saw eight raccoons on a singi» tree limb, they went back for the guns and bagged all of them.

Our citizenship will be revealed says the state college of forestry, In the management of our forests and other natural resources.

"Reparations mnst be msde for the tremendous waste of natural resources wrought in this coun­try," the college says. "Until re­cently the public has been the chief loser, but those who control the exploitation of oar nature resources are' beginning to feci the effects of depletion, too. I'1

the movement tor conservation, the rehabilitation of the forest the prevention of erosion, together with the regulation of water tw ply through proper forest • • * agement. stand out as son* of our most Important duties."

sbk. i A

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